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International Trade Price Indexes, Australia methodology

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Reference period
December 2021
Released
27/01/2022

Introduction

This publication contains indexes measuring changes in the prices paid for imports of merchandise that are landed in Australia each quarter, and prices received for exports of merchandise that are shipped from Australia each quarter. The Import Price Indexes are in tables 1-6 and the Export Price Indexes are in tables 7-11.

The indexes are calculated on the index reference period 2011-12 = 100.0.

Scope

The Import Price Index excludes the following items (representing less than 2% of the value of merchandise imported during the weighting period) because of the inherent difficulties in pricing the items to constant quality (see under Price measurement, below):

  • live animals (not for food)
  • jewellery and other articles of precious metal, n.e.s.
  • military equipment
  • commodities not classified according to kind
  • works of art, collectors' pieces, antiques
  • railway vehicles
  • ships of various types.
     

The Export Price Index includes re-exports of merchandise (i.e. goods which are imported into Australia and exported at a later date without physical transformation).

Classifications

Index numbers for selected sections of the Standard International Trade Classification (SITC) are provided in table 1, 3 and 12 (Import Price Index) and table 7 and 9 (Export Price Index). The SITC (Revision 4) used from the September quarter 2008 onwards is the United Nations' updated version, replacing SITC (Revision 3). SITC (Revision 4) retains the overall structure of SITC (Revision 3) and consists of the same number of sections, divisions and groups. Changes to the classification labels and components were made at levels lower than those used in the Import and Export Price Indexes. As a result, there has been no material impact on the indexes, which remain comparable across the changes in classification.

The Import Price Index is also presented by Balance of Payments Broad Economic Categories in tables 4-6, which have been disaggregated into Balance of Payments groupings of Consumption goods, Capital goods and Intermediate and other merchandise goods. From the September quarter 2008 onwards, the previous heading of Classification of Broad Economic Categories (BEC) End Use, has been replaced with Balance of Payments Broad Economic Categories. This is simply a name change, with the series remaining comparable to previously published series.

The Export Price Index is also presented by Balance of Payments Classification of Exports groupings in tables 10 and 11.

Items and weights

The Import Price Index and Export Price Index are annually reweighted chained Lowe indexes. This method of weighting was introduced for the September quarter 2000 and replaced the 'fixed-base' method of weighting in which the weighting patterns were updated infrequently (generally once every 5 or 10 years).

The annual reweighting and chaining process involves a number of steps to implement new weights for the Import and Export Price Indexes. The current weighting basis for the Import Price Index is derived from the value of import items during 2020-21. The weighting basis for the Export Price Index is generally derived using the average value of export items during 2019-20 and 2020-21, to account for volatility in export prices. The Import Price Index and Export Price Index weights were then revalued to reflect June quarter 2021 price levels. Indexes using the new weights for the September quarter 2021 were linked to the published June quarter 2021 (link period) levels, which were derived using weights from the previous series. The index reference period for each series continues to be 2011-12 = 100.0.

The commodities directly represented in each index (the index items) have been selected on the basis of the significance of their import and export values in the period 2020-21 for imports and 2019-20 and 2020-21 for exports. All significant commodities have been selected for pricing. The weights for minor commodities which are not directly priced are included with those of comparable directly priced products, where prices are likely to move in a similar way.

Price measurement

In general, prices of individual shipments are obtained from major importers and exporters of the selected items and relate to the quarter in which the imported goods physically arrive in Australia and the exported goods physically leave Australia.

Imports are priced on a 'free on board' (f.o.b.), country of origin basis. Therefore freight and insurance charges involved in shipping goods from foreign to Australian ports are excluded from the prices used in the index, as are Australian import duties and taxes. Similarly, exports are priced on a f.o.b. basis at the main Australian ports of export. Exports are exempt from taxes on products.

The Import Price Index and Export Price Index employ the use of exchange rates where the contractual currencies of transactions are recorded in currencies other than Australian dollars. While a proportion of Australia’s international trade is conducted in Australian dollars, those that are traded in foreign currencies require conversion to Australian dollars. Hence changes in the relative value of the Australian dollar against overseas currencies (in particular, the major trading currencies such as the United States dollar, Japanese yen, Pound sterling and Euro) has a direct impact on the price of products purchased or sold in foreign currencies. That is, when the Australian dollar appreciates, it buys more foreign currency, and the Australian dollar commodity price falls. Conversely, when the Australian Dollar depreciates, it buys less foreign currency and the Australian dollar price of the commodity rises. As noted, imports are priced on a country of origin basis. Therefore the exchange rates applied are impacted by the differences between the date of transaction (ownership change) and the shipping time from the country of origin to Australia.

The main pricing methodology used is specification pricing, under which a manageable sample of precisely specified products is selected, in consultation with each reporting business, for repeat pricing. In specifying the products, care is taken to ensure that they are fully defined in terms of all the characteristics which influence their transaction prices. As such, all the relevant technical characteristics need to be described (e.g. make, model, features) along with the unit of sale, type of packaging, conditions of sale (e.g. delivered, payment within 30 days), etc. The goods are also specified by country and market in order to lessen the impact of price variations attributable solely to changes over time in the mix of countries, or markets.

When the quality or specifications of an item being priced change over time, adjustments are made to the reported prices so that the index captures only pure price change. That is, any element of price change attributable to a change in quality is removed. If there is an increase (decrease) in the quality of an item, then the price index is adjusted downwards (upwards) to reflect the 'worth' of the quality change. This technique is known as pricing to constant quality.

Wherever possible, prices from volume selling products being traded with predominant countries, or markets, are obtained to ensure specifications have a good chance of being re-priced over time and index series are representative of overall price movements. Individual product weights and weights between markets and countries are regularly reviewed to keep the indexes up to date. The ABS has access to a rich source of international merchandise trade data and selectively uses average unit values in the Export Price Index, and to a limited extent in the Import Price Index, to augment specification pricing. Imported commodities are typically more stable in price but non-homogenous in character, and generally do not lend themselves to measurement by average unit value.

Index numbers

Index numbers for financial years are simple averages of the relevant quarterly index numbers.

Rounding

Any discrepancies between totals and sums of components in this publication are due to rounding.

Analysis of index changes

Movements in indexes from one period to another can be expressed either as changes in index points or as percentage changes. The following example illustrates the method of calculating index points changes and percentage changes between any two periods:

Export Price Index, All groups index number:
December quarter 2021 150.9 (see table 7)
less September quarter 2021 145.8 (see table 7)
Change in index points 5.1
Percentage change 5.1/145.8 x 100 = 3.5%

Tables 2 and 8 provide analyses of the contribution which SITC sections and divisions make to the All groups Import Price Index and Export Price Index, respectively.

Related publications

Users may also wish to refer to the following related publications, which are available from the ABS website:

Current publications and other products released by the ABS are listed on the ABS website http://www.abs.gov.au. The ABS also issues a daily Release Advice on the website which details products to be released in the week ahead.

Appendix - index structures and weighting patterns

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Quality declaration

Institutional environment

Relevance

Timeliness

Accuracy

Coherence

Interpretability

Accessibility

Abbreviations

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